Geology

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For all things geology, including serious discussions, memes, field photos, rockhound questions, and more. See also: Mining, Geophysics, Geology Careers, and !earthscience@mander.xyz

General rules: must be geoscience related; must adhere to lemmy.ca moderation rules; no pseudoscience.

founded 1 year ago
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Please do not explore the evacuated locations and currently bare riverbed as you could be swept away without any prior warning


Evacuation and Affected Locations

Country: Canada
Province: BC
Local Regions: Chilcotin River, Fraser River


Additional Sources

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Geology Hub: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoRx-tUzbjw

Interesting description of the 3 phases involved when such deep mantle earthquakes have a theoretical limit of 3.8 magnitude.

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Geology Professor Shawn Wilsey on location with a twisted slate rock unit in Idaho. (8:12 minutes)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foliation_(geology)

Foliation with slatey cleavage perpendicular to bedding - Giggity Giggity

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Some background on the earthquake swarm off the Vancouver Island coast.

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Forbidden Fibers

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These look to me like regular intrusive iron rich veins. Boulder is about 1m across, and sandstone/mudstone, area is volcanic.

I am not a geologist.. any ideas?

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Brand new amateur collector here, I have a piece of a rock that im trying to identify that is covered in what seems to be iron, which is hiding this bright blue rock ive never seen before, however the rock is full of bubbles and is extremely jagged, is there a way to examine and polish without harming the shape

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/14740589

high arctic desert. Yes there's water, but no real vegetation.

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Source: https://xkcd.com/2501/

Alt text: "How could anyone consider themselves a well-rounded adult without a basic understanding of silicate geochemistry? Silicates are everywhere! It's hard to throw a rock without throwing one!"

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To the surprise of no environmental geo anywhere

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by YeetPics@mander.xyz to c/geology@lemmy.ca
 
 

‐-----------------------‐-update 11-11‐----------------------

After more research and some lucky talks I believe this to be epidote from tailings out of the Wolverine Mine, a few miles from where I found these pieces.

‐-----------------------‐-original post------------------------

Was rock hounding on the southern shore of Lake Superior. Found these green crystal deposits that formed like geodes, specimens are small, the largest is about the size of a corn kernel. A local said it could be chlorasolite but I don't think it matches based on color and clarity. Any thoughts would be appreciated!

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Geologists have long known that around 155 million years ago, a 5,000 km long piece of continent broke off western Australia and drifted away. They can see that by the 'void' it left behind: a basin hidden deep below the ocean known as the Argo Abyssal Plain. The underwater feature also lends its name to the newly formed continent: Argoland. The structure of the seafloor shows that this continent must have drifted off to the northwest, and must have ended up where the islands of Southeast Asia are located today.

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How diamonds form still isn't entirely understood, but laboratory experiments show that the gemstones crystallize only under extreme pressures. Most naturally occurring stones have been traced to the upper mantle, at depths between 93 and 186 miles (150 to 300 km), where pressures can reach beyond 20,000 atmospheres.

For a long time, this put diamonds in competition with a gem called peridot for the title of deepest-occurring gemstone. Peridot is the gem form of a mineral called olivine that makes up more than half of the upper mantle, which extends from the base of the crust down to 255 miles (410 km). But in 2016, scientists described a collection of superdeep diamonds sourced from around 410 miles (660 km), and another batch in 2021 was determined to come from a depth of 466 miles (750 km).

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